Breakthrough Research: FAU Scientists Win Funding to Uncover Early Alzheimer鈥檚 Cognitive Deficits Using Brain Organoids and Robotics

Friday, Nov 21, 2025
Breakthrough Research: FAU Scientists Win Funding to Uncover Early Alzheimer鈥檚 Cognitive Deficits Using Brain Organoids and Robotic

Alzheimer鈥檚 disease (AD) affects more than 6 million Americans and costs the U.S. economy over $300 billion annually. To better understand the circuit-level deficits that underlie early cognitive decline in AD, Rodrigo Pena, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the Department of Biological Sciences, Charles E. Schmidt College of Science, was named a SEED funding recipient by the College of Engineering and Computer Science and the Institute for Sensing and Embedded Network Systems Engineering (I-SENSE) for the 2025-26 fiscal year. Together with researchers in the College of Engineering and Computer Science, the team received $22,500 to study, 鈥淏rain organoid-interfaced robotic hand to investigate learning and memory deficits in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease (AD).鈥澨

鈥淚 am thrilled and deeply grateful,鈥 expressed Pena. 鈥淩eceiving this I-SENSE support is both a vote of confidence in our vision and a way to generate the preliminary data we need for large federal proposals. Personally, it is energizing to see 无码视频 Atlantic University invest in truly multidisciplinary, high-risk/high-reward science.鈥澨

Pena, along with Erik Engeberg, Ph.D., professor, FAU Department of Ocean and Mechanical Engineering, Minghan Wei, Ph.D., assistant professor, FAU Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and Ramin Pashaie, Ph.D., professor and I-SENSE Fellow, FAU Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, aim to create the first closed loop 鈥渘eurorobotic鈥 test bed in which human cortical organoids, grown from both healthy and Alzheimer鈥檚 patients, control and receive sensory feedback from a dexterous robotic hand. By watching how these mini-brains learn鈥攐r fail to learn鈥攖actile tasks, they can pinpoint the circuit-level deficits that underlie early cognitive decline in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.听

鈥淐urrent mouse models capture only fragments of the human disease,鈥 noted Pena. 鈥淥ur human-cell-based system provides a much more relevant platform to discover early biomarkers, understand disease mechanisms and rapidly screen candidate therapeutics.鈥澨

Pena leads the computational neuroscience arm of the project. His group is tasked to build and calibrate large-scale Hodgkin-Huxley network models that mirror the electrophysiological signatures recorded from the organoids and fuse three data streams together, including MEA spikes/LFPs, optical coherence tomography (OCT) images and biochemical assays. They will also work to identify the ion-channel and synaptic parameters that best explain dysfunctions similar to AD. Finally, the team anticipates generating in-silico predictions that will guide the next round of robotic learning experiments, effectively closing the loop between experiment and model.听

Preparatory work is already underway. Pena has begun coding the first version of the study鈥檚 simulation framework. The SEED grant also supports a graduate student who joined the team in August. Once the organoid cultures are established, he expects wet-lab experiments to start in the spring.听

鈥淎lzheimer鈥檚 disease is an interdisciplinary problem, and cross-departmental projects enable us to tackle AD issues that no single discipline can solve,鈥 said Pena. 鈥淚n our case, stem-cell biology, electrophysiology, robotics, optical imaging and computational modeling come together to answer fundamental questions about AD. This synergy accelerates discovery, makes our grant proposals more competitive and gives students exposure to a wider array of skills and career paths.鈥澨

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